Tuesday, 9 December 2014

Inklings of a New World



 All religions have millennial prophecies in which “the end of the world” is proclaimed for a future time.  Many also mention a millennial rule of order and justice also for the future. 

Baha’is believe that the foretold times have arrived and that “the old world order” is dying, even as the new world order is emerging.  That is, the old accepted way in which the world functions, the separation of the human world into ‘sovereign nations’, the separation of races, of classes, and economic systems of advantage, are all being fast eroded.  In their place new systems are gradually evolving, and are often overlooked because of their immature forms.

The United Nations, or a similarly purposed organisation, must gradually evolve from its current condition to a world governing body that properly embodies the following characteristics:.

“A world executive, backed by an international Force, will carry out the decisions arrived at, and apply the laws enacted by, this world legislature, and will safeguard the organic unity of the whole commonwealth. A world tribunal will adjudicate and deliver its compulsory and final verdict in all and any disputes that may arise between the various elements constituting this universal system.”
                (Shoghi Effendi, The World Order of Baha'u'llah, p. 203)

The creation and evolution of the Internet surely fulfills this further part of the prediction, written in the 1930s.

“A mechanism of world inter-communication will be devised, embracing the whole planet, freed from national hindrances and restrictions, and functioning with marvelous swiftness and perfect regularity.”
                (Shoghi Effendi, The World Order of Baha'u'llah, p. 203)

The imminent collapse of the economic system is foreseen by many, though they are often labelled as doomsayers. However, an economic system largely proclaiming to be the “free market”, yet where possible, the participants subvert regulations and politicians to stamp out fair competition and increase profits, and with a monetary system based on continuous rapid expansion where the capital largely does not exist requiring the constant enlargement of debt, cannot provide stability nor endure much longer.

So while this system is in its death throes, where is the new system in its infancy, to replace the old financial order? Baha’u’llah, founder of the Baha’i Faith, proclaimed that one world currency is needed. Might not that currency be one of the digital ones being devised, such as Bitcoin? How else will the nations be persuaded to relinquish their separate, age-old currencies? Bitcoin is associated in peoples’ minds with crime and pornography, but that was also the accusation against the Internet a couple of decades ago, yet people now would not be without this system of communication and information.  Who knows what will develop from these systems given ten, twenty years?

But where is the economic system to replace the multinational corporations dominating the world economic system and its politics, and to utilise a new currency system? Even as world-embracing systems such as Twitter and Facebook have rapidly evolved on the Internet, so systems will evolve linked with digital currency, the Internet, and mobile phones. Indeed mobile phone technology is starting to revolutionize the fortunes of ordinary people in the Third World, and linked with digital currency, their problem of a lack of banking facilities will be addressed.  In the west now, we have the new technology of Peer to Peer Lending, creating an alternative to conventional banking.

Some balance is already being created in Third World economics through Micro-financing. Often micro-financing is directed towards the women, bringing an important principle into play, namely equality of men and women. This principle, announced by Baha’u’llah, is indispensable to producing a just, stable world system.

Interestingly, there are other technologies being invented in the West, which seem destined to bring equity to the world, such as solar power. This technology, though of benefit to western countries, is immediately revolutionary to the Third World. All benefits of new technologies, however, can be reduced or undone by political and social instability.

Unless the world system becomes more equal between east and west, there can be no long-term stability for any country in the world.

(Inspired foresight by Baha’u’llah and Shoghi Effendi, opinions by Keith Mitcherson)